Abstract

Multidrug-resistant (MDR) Acinetobacter baumannii is a growing concern in many countries. This report describes patient demographics, antimicrobial susceptibilities and molecular characteristics of A. baumannii cases identified through the Canadian Ward Surveillance Study (CANWARD). In addition, clinical cases involving MDR carbapenem-resistant A. baumannii are also detailed in this report. From January to December 2007, 12 hospital centres across Canada submitted pathogens from clinics, emergency rooms, intensive care units and medical/surgical wards as part of the CANWARD study. MICs were determined using microbroth dilution (CLSI). PCR and sequence analysis identified OXA genes among carbapenem-resistant isolates. PFGE was used to determine genetic relatedness and compare representatives of the Midlands 2 strain, OXA-23 clone 1 or 2, T strains and isolates collected from military sources. This study identified A. baumannii in 0.33% (n = 26) of infections. The majority of isolates remained susceptible to the antimicrobials tested, however, 7.7% (n = 2) displayed an MDR phenotype, including resistance to carbapenems. In one isolate bla(OXA-58) was found to be the likely cause of carbapenem resistance while the other isolate had an insertion sequence element upstream of its intrinsic bla(OXA-51). The clinical data of these two isolates suggest that one is travel-related while the source of the other remains unknown. A. baumannii infections from Canadian hospitals were relatively low. Carbapenem-resistant MDR A. baumannii were also rare and unrelated to previously observed isolates from military sources. Continued surveillance in Canada is suggested in order to determine if such organisms will become a problem.

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